In mathematics, a constant function is a function whose (output) value is the same for every input value.
Basic properties
As a real-valued function of a real-valued argument, a constant function has the general form y(x) = c or just y = c. For example, the function y(x) = 4 is the specific constant function where the output value is c = 4. The domain of this function is the set of all real numbers. The image of this function is the singleton set {4}. The independent variable x does not appear on the right side of the function expression and so its value is "vacuously substituted"; namely y(0) = 4, y(β2.7) = 4, y(Ο) = 4, and so on. No matter what value of x is input, the output is 4.[1]
The graph of the constant function y = c is a horizontal line in the plane that passes through the point (0, c).[2] In the context of a polynomial in one variable x, the constant function is called non-zero constant function because it is a polynomial of degree 0, and its general form is f(x) = c, where c is nonzero. This function has no intersection point with the x-axis, meaning it has no root (zero). On the other hand, the polynomial f(x) = 0 is the identically zero function. It is the (trivial) constant function and every x is a root. Its graph is the x-axis in the plane.[3] Its graph is symmetric with respect to the y-axis, and therefore a constant function is an even function.[4]
In the context where it is defined, the derivative of a function is a measure of the rate of change of function values with respect to change in input values. Because a constant function does not change, its derivative is 0.[5] This is often written: . The converse is also true. Namely, if yβ²(x) = 0 for all real numbers x, then y is a constant function.[6] For example, given the constant function . The derivative of y is the identically zero function .
For any non-empty X, every set Y is isomorphic to the set of constant functions in . For any X and each element y in Y, there is a unique function such that for all . Conversely, if a function satisfies for all , is by definition a constant function.
As a corollary, the one-point set is a generator in the category of sets.
Every set is canonically isomorphic to the function set , or hom set in the category of sets, where 1 is the one-point set. Because of this, and the adjunction between Cartesian products and hom in the category of sets (so there is a canonical isomorphism between functions of two variables and functions of one variable valued in functions of another (single) variable, ) the category of sets is a closed monoidal category with the Cartesian product of sets as tensor product and the one-point set as tensor unit. In the isomorphisms natural in X, the left and right unitors are the projections and the ordered pairs and respectively to the element , where is the unique point in the one-point set.